/ / Little Brother, News

Smári McCarthy, a high-school teacher in Iceland, has been teaching a course unit on civil liberties and technological literacy based around my novel Little Brother. He’s launched a new Google Group for the kids in his class (and other classes around the world) to continue the discussion — what an awesome idea!

At the end of the last class yesterday the idea came up to form a
mailing list for young people who’re interested in digital freedoms,
computer security and so on, and one of the students suggested that we
call the list “Watching Back”. The list is watchingback@googlegroups.com
and almost all the kids who took the course are on it.

It would be great if people running similar courses could get their
students involved on the list, and that teachers and other people who
know something about the subject hang around and help guide the
discussion as mentors.

There’s a lot to discuss. A running theme through the course was the
importance of the power of young people to influence the world. I read
from the Declaration of Independence of Cyberspace in the last class,
because it is somewhat prophetic of what is going on:

“You are terrified of your own children, since they are natives in a
world where you will always be immigrants. Because you fear them, you
entrust your bureaucracies with the parental responsibilities you are
too cowardly to confront yourselves.”

Throughout the network young people are being empowered to change the
world, they’re figuring out the beauty of the hacker culture and the
fight for freedom. In a world where big brother is watching with
increasing scrutiny it is a big relief to know that at least the
children are watching back.

Watching Back

/ / News

My latest Locus column, “Why I Copyfight,” was published a couple weeks back while I was on honeymoon and made quite a stir. It’s intended as a concise answer to the question, “Why should we care about the copyright wars, anyway?”

The Internet is a system for efficiently making copies between computers. Whereas a conversation in your kitchen involves mere perturbations of air by noise, the same conversation on the net involves making thousands of copies. Every time you press a key, the keypress is copied several times on your computer, then copied into your modem, then copied onto a series of routers, thence (often) to a server, which may make hundreds of copies both ephemeral and long-term, and then to the other party(ies) to the conversation, where dozens more copies might be made.

Copyright law valorizes copying as a rare and noteworthy event. On the Internet, copying is automatic, massive, instantaneous, free, and constant. Clip a Dilbert cartoon and stick it on your office door and you’re not violating copyright. Take a picture of your office door and put it on your homepage so that the same co-workers can see it, and you’ve violated copyright law, and since copyright law treats copying as such a rarified activity, it assesses penalties that run to the hundreds of thousands of dollars for each act of infringement.

There’s a word for all the stuff we do with creative works — all the conversing, retelling, singing, acting out, drawing, and thinking: we call it culture.

Culture’s old. It’s older than copyright.

Why I Copyfight

/ / News


My novel Little Brother has just come out in the UK, a month ahead of schedule (Waterstone’s, the book-store chain, wanted it as a featured title, but their slot was in October, not November). This is fabulous news, of course, but it does mean that I’m not around to do signings and events right away (I got married on Sunday night and am now on my honeymoon — this was written in advance and automatically posted!). Still, I wanted to make sure that there were signed copies available right away for collector/fans who didn’t want to have to choose between getting a copy now and waiting for a month to get a signed one.

So last week, before leaving for the wedding, I popped into the HarperCollins offices in London and signed a stack of 500 copies of Little Brother that are now on sale through Play.com. It’s only while supplies last, natch, so act now!

Little Brother UK edition signed


/ / Little Brother, News


My novel Little Brother has just come out in the UK, a month ahead of schedule (Waterstone’s, the book-store chain, wanted it as a featured title, but their slot was in October, not November). This is fabulous news, of course, but it does mean that I’m not around to do signings and events right away (I got married on Sunday night and am now on my honeymoon — this was written in advance and automatically posted!). Still, I wanted to make sure that there were signed copies available right away for collector/fans who didn’t want to have to choose between getting a copy now and waiting for a month to get a signed one.

So last week, before leaving for the wedding, I popped into the HarperCollins offices in London and signed a stack of 500 copies of Little Brother that are now on sale through Play.com. It’s only while supplies last, natch, so act now!

Little Brother UK edition signed


/ / Content, News

Mathematician/physicist Jan Rubak has done me the honour of recording readings of six of the essays from my nonfiction collection, Content and uploading them to the Internet Archive. He’s a great reader, too!

– In Praise of Fanfic
– Metacrap: Putting the torch to seven straw-men of the meta-utopia
– Amish for QWERTY
– Free(konomic) Ebooks
– The Progressive Apocalypse and Other Futurismic Delights
– When the Singularity is More Than a Literary Device: An Interview with Futurist-Inventor Ray Kurzweil

All 28 essays are available as free downloads (and there have been a ton of conversions to everything from Braille to OpenDoc) and, of course, there’s a beautiful physical object for sale, too.

Content readings

(Thanks, Jan!)

/ / News

Last August, I travelled to Springfield, Mass for 3PiCon, a science fiction convention where I was co-guest of honor with Randall “XKCD” Munroe. We did some fun programming items together, but the best was the last day’s event, a panel called “My Day at Work.” In honor of Randall’s comics, I attended in red cape and goggles, natch, and we had a rollicking time. Karl Wagner caught it on video (the audio’s a little poor, but you can hear it), and it’s been a hoot to re-live it this morning.

3Pi-Con – My Day At Work – Cory Doctorow & Randall Munroe

(Thanks, Karl!)

/ / Little Brother, News, Remixes

PMOG — the Passively Multiplayer Online Game — has two missions for Little Brother. PMOG is a game you play by scavenger-hunting the web, while your browser keeps track of where you go and what you do. It lets you lay traps for other players and score points by luring them in. One of the missions (How I Read Little Brother) was created by my friend Justin Hall, who co-founded PMOG, and the other (Why read Little Brother?) was created by a fan, Treekyte. Both seem like a lot of fun!

/ / Little Brother, News, Remixes

Bill Clementson turned the bibliography at the end of the book into a hyperlinked file, making it easy to follow the references. Here it is — I’ve also updated the HTML version to include the info. Thanks, Bill!

No writer creates from scratch — we all engage in what Isaac Newton called
“standing on the shoulders of giants.”
We borrow, plunder and remix the art and culture created by those around us and by our literary forebears.

If you liked this book and want to learn more, there are plenty of sources to turn to, online and at your local library or bookstore.


Hacking
is a great subject. All science relies on telling other people what you’ve done so that they can verify it, learn from it, and improve on it, and hacking is all about that process, so there’s plenty published on the subject.

Start with Andrew “Bunnie” Huang’s

“Hacking the Xbox,” (No Starch Press, 2003) a wonderful book that tells the story of how Bunnie, then a student at MIT, reverse-engineered the Xbox’s anti-tampering mechanisms and opened the way for all the subsequent cool hacks for the platform. In telling the story, Bunnie has also created a kind of Bible for reverse engineering and hardware hacking.

Bruce Schneier’s
“Secrets and Lies”
(Wiley, 2000) and
“Beyond Fear”
(Copernicus, 2003) are the definitive lay-person’s texts on understanding security and thinking critically about it, while his
“Applied Cryptography”
(Wiley, 1995) remains the authoritative source for understanding crypto. Bruce maintains an excellent

blog and mailing list at schneier.com/blog. Crypto and security are the realm of the talented amateur, and the
“cypherpunk”
movement is full of kids, home-makers, parents, lawyers, and every other stripe of person, hammering away on security protocols and ciphers.

There are several great magazines devoted to this subject, but the two best ones are
2600: The Hacker Quarterly
, which is full of pseudonymous, boasting accounts of hacks accomplished, and O’Reilly’s
MAKE magazine
, which features solid HOWTOs for making your own hardware projects at home.

The online world overflows with material on this subject, of course. Ed Felten and Alex J Halderman’s

Freedom to Tinker (www.freedom-to-tinker.com) is a blog maintained by two fantastic Princeton engineering profs who write lucidly about security, wiretapping, anti-copying technology and crypto.

Don’t miss Natalie Jeremijenko’s
“Feral Robotics”
at UC San Diego (xdesign.ucsd.edu/feralrobots/). Natalie and her students rewire toy robot dogs from Toys R Us and turn them into bad-ass toxic-waste detectors. They unleash them on public parks where big corporations have dumped their waste and demonstrate in media-friendly fashion how toxic the ground is.

Like many of the hacks in this book, the tunneling-over-DNS stuff is real. Dan Kaminsky, a tunneling expert of the first water, published details in 2004 (
www.doxpara.com/bo2004.ppt
).

The guru of “citizen journalism” is Dan Gillmor, who is presently running Center for Citizen Media at Harvard and UC Berkeley — he also wrote a hell of a book on the subject,

“We, the Media” (O’Reilly, 2004).

If you want to learn more about hacking arphids, start with Annalee Newitz’s Wired Magazine article
“The RFID Hacking Underground”
(www.wirednews.com/wired/archive/14.05/rfid.html). Adam Greenfield’s
“Everyware”
(New Riders Press, 2006) is a chilling look at the dangers of a world of arphids.

Neal Gershenfeld’s
Fab Lab at MIT (fab.cba.mit.edu)
is hacking out the world’s first real, cheap “3D printers” that can pump out any object you can dream of. This is documented in Gershenfeld’s excellent book on the subject,

“Fab” (Basic Books, 2005).

Bruce Sterling’s
“Shaping Things”
(MIT Press, 2005) shows how arphids and fabs could be used to force companies to build products that don’t poison the world.

Speaking of Bruce Sterling, he wrote the first great book on hackers and the law,
“The Hacker Crackdown”
(Bantam, 1993), which is also the first book published by a major publisher that was released on the Internet at the same time (copies abound; see
stuff.mit.edu/hacker/hacker.html
for one). It was reading this book that turned me on to the

Electronic Frontier Foundation, where I was privileged to work for four years.

The
Electronic Frontier Foundation (www.eff.org)
is a charitable membership organization with a student rate. They spend the money that private individuals give them to keep the Internet safe for personal liberty, free speech, due process, and the rest of the Bill of Rights. They’re the Internet’s most effective freedom fighters, and you can join the struggle just by signing up for
their mailing list
and writing to your elected officials when they’re considering selling you out in the name of fighting terrorism, piracy, the mafia, or whatever bogeyman has caught their attention today. EFF also helps maintain
TOR, The Onion Router
, which is a real technology you can use right now to get out of your government, school or library’s censoring firewall (
tor.eff.org
).

EFF has a huge, deep website with amazing information aimed at a general audience, as do the
American Civil Liberties Union (aclu.org)
,
Public Knowledge (publicknowledge.org)
,
FreeCulture (freeculture.org)
,
Creative Commons (creativecommons.org)
— all of which also are worthy of your support.
FreeCulture
is an international student movement that actively recruits kids to found their own local chapters at their high schools and universities. It’s a great way to get involved and make a difference.

A lot of websites chronicle the fight for cyberliberties, but few go at it with the verve of
Slashdot, “News for Nerds, Stuff That Matters” (slashdot.org)
.

And of course, you have to visit
Wikipedia
, the collaborative, net-authored encyclopedia that anyone can edit, with more than 1,000,000 entries in English alone. Wikipedia covers hacking and counterculture in astonishing depth and with amazing, up-to-the-nanosecond currency. One caution: you can’t just look at the entries in Wikipedia. It’s really important to look at the “History” and “Discussion” links at the top of every Wikipedia page to see how the current version of the truth was arrived at, get an appreciation for the competing points-of-view there, and decide for yourself whom you trust.

If you want to get at some real forbidden knowledge, have a skim around
Cryptome (cryptome.org)
, the world’s most amazing archive of secret, suppressed and liberated information. Cryptome’s brave publishers collect material that’s been pried out of the state by Freedom of Information Act requests or leaked by whistle-blowers and publishes it.

The best fictional account of the history of crypto is, hands-down, Neal Stephenson’s

Cryptonomicon (Avon, 2002). Stephenson tells the story of
Alan Turing
and the Nazi Enigma Machine, turning it into a gripping war-novel that you won’t be able to put down.

The
Pirate Party
mentioned in Little Brother is real and thriving in Sweden (
www.piratpartiet.se
), Denmark, the USA and France at the time of this writing (July, 2006). They’re a little out-there, but a movement takes all kinds.

Speaking of out-there,
Abbie Hoffman
and the
Yippies
did indeed try to levitate the Pentagon, throw money into the stock exchange, and work with a group called the
Up Against the Wall Motherfuckers
. Abbie Hoffman’s classic book on ripping off the system, “Steal This Book,” is back in print (Four Walls Eight Windows, 2002) and it’s also online as a collaborative wiki for people who want to try to update it (

stealthiswiki.nine9pages.com).

Hoffman’s autobiography, “Soon to Be a Major Motion Picture” (also in print from Four Walls Eight Windows) is one of my favorite memoirs ever, even if it is highly fictionalized. Hoffman was an incredible storyteller and had great activist instincts. If you want to know how he really lived his life, though, try Larry Sloman’s “Steal This Dream” (Doubleday, 1998).

More counterculture fun: Jack Kerouac’s “On the Road” can be had in practically any used bookstore for a buck or two. Allan Ginsberg’s

“HOWL” is online in many places, and you can hear him read it if you search for the MP3 at archive.org. For bonus points, track down the album “Tenderness Junction” by the Fugs, which includes the audio of Allan Ginsberg and Abbie Hoffman’s levitation ceremony at the Pentagon.

This book couldn’t have been written if not for George Orwell’s magnificent, world-changing “1984,” the best novel ever published on how societies go wrong. I read this book when I was 12 and have read it 30 or 40 times since, and every time, I get something new out of it. Orwell was a master of storytelling and was clearly sick over the totalitarian state that emerged in the Soviet Union. 1984 holds up today as a genuinely frightening work of science fiction, and it is one of the novels that literally changed the world. Today, “Orwellian” is synonymous with a state of ubiquitous surveillance, doublethink, and torture.

Many novelists have tackled parts of the story in Little Brother. Daniel Pinkwater’s towering comic masterpiece,
“Alan Mendelsohn: The Boy From Mars”
(presently in print as part of the omnibus “5 Novels,” Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1997) is a book that every geek needs to read. If you’ve ever felt like an outcast for being too smart or weird, READ THIS BOOK. It changed my life.

On a more contemporary front, there’s Scott Westerfeld’s
“So Yesterday”
(Razorbill, 2004), which follows the adventures of cool hunters and counterculture jammers. Scott and his wife Justine Larbalestier were my partial inspiration to write a book for young adults — as was Kathe Koja. Thanks, guys.